I understand that Workington North was built so that people could travel between both halves of Workington, the rail bridge being the only way of crossing the River Derwent after flooding damaged the road bridges.

I understand that Workington North was built so that people could travel between both halves of Workington, the rail bridge being the only way of crossing the River Derwent after flooding damaged the road bridges.

Prreciate its not the national network, but a few years back the Ffestiniog ran a bus replacement rail service due to flooding on the road. Operated for a few days between Porthmadog and Pont Croesor iirc.

I think I read on here recently (last week or the one before that) that Northern were accepting bus tickets between Leeds and Bradford Interchange because of some incident on the road (was it gas-related) causing major gridlock.

On occasions of major disruption in central London, TfL will announce that bus ticket holders can use the Tube. Of course, nobody is actually able to hold a bus "ticket" anymore, they will touch in and touch out on the tube and thus incur a tube fare which, perhaps, a handful of people will reclaim.

On occasions of major disruption in central London, TfL will announce that bus ticket holders can use the Tube. Of course, nobody is actually able to hold a bus "ticket" anymore, they will touch in and touch out on the tube and thus incur a tube fare which, perhaps, a handful of people will reclaim.

There was a half marathon in Liverpool one Sunday last year which blocked the road used by the 82, one of the major bus routes into the city centre.

The buses were diverted to terminate at Brunswick station, with bus tickets accepted on Merseyrail between there and Liverpool Central. I think Merseyrail even ran some extra trains to handle the additional passengers.

Yep, think there still are bus passes. Couple of months ago saw a bloke get a PF for trying to use a bus pass on the DLR.

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The irony is that a bus pass is valid on Croydon tramlink rail services, which are of course light rail.

The DLR is also light rail, but is not valid on bus passes.

I once had someone ask "is this a train or a tram?" while on the DLR. I paused, as I was unsure who he was asking. I came to the conclusion he was asking anyone who'd listen, so I simply said "it's a train", which seemed to satisfy him.

When the rail element of the rebuilt estuary bridge Pont Briwet in west Wales opened last autumn after months of closure, according to some reports there was confusion about the opening date, and no replacement buses had been ordered for the last couple of days of closure, so some planned driver refamiliarisation runs were converted to public services.